In HTML, if you don't specify a specific width, block-level elements are vertically expandable by their nature. Think of an unordered list. That list will grow be be as big as it needs to be to fit all of it's list elements. If a user increases the font size in their browser, the list will expand vertically, growing to fit the larger content. Sometimes it feels like vertical-only expansion is limiting and it would be nice if the element could grow horizontally as well as vertically with a font size increase by the user.

Abstract

If you have been using the Firefox 3 beta much, you might notice that it handles this automatically. Increasing the size in Firefox 3 doesn't just increase the font size, it increases everything in size, which actually feel really natural and nice. But despite it's growing market share, we can't count on Firefox for the resizing needs of our users.

I am going to attempt to explain how to make an All-Expandable box, with the following features:

Works in all major browsers

Expands both vertically and horizontally

Uses a single background image

This is a bit of a tall order, especially the use of the background image. This will end up using kind of a combination of the CSS sprites technique since different areas of the image will be used in different places and the Sliding Doors technique, since different amounts of those images will be visible depending on the current size.

Make the box horizontally expandable

There is one way simple way to make a box horizontally expandable: specify your width in em's. For example:

.box {
width: 35em;
margin: 50px auto;
}

The margin is there for example purposes, to keep it centered and away from the top edge of the browser window.

Thinking about image placement

In this example, the box has rounded corners, a bit of a drop shadow, and a bit of an inner shadow. This means that all of the four corners of the box are distinctly different. This is uniquely challenging since images are not expandable. We will need a way to apply the four different corner images to the four corners of the box separately.

Also, we will need to overlap them in such a way that the transitions are seamless. And also, we are trying to do this with only a single background image, to make it as efficient as possible.

Below is an image of how you might think of what we need to do. The boxes would be overlapping, I nudged them apart so you can see the whole boxes.

When creating the background image, think big. The bigger your background image, the larger you will be able to expand without borking the layout. The example background is 700px wide which gets you about 4 or 5 different text sizings it works at, but it does eventually break apart above that.

Coding the box

Of course we always like to be as semantic as possible with our XTHML. That means not using extra markup for things that aren't really content but are purely design. Unfortunately, with all this craziness of needing four boxes for our single box, it ain't gonna happen.

Note the negative margins are necessary to pull back from the padding applied from the parent spans. It just works out good that way with the padding, keeping text inside the box. Also note the height of the bottom spans are set in pixels. That is on purpose as they need to be kept short and not be expandable.

This has been tested in Firefox, Safari, Opera, and IE 6 and is working in all of them, so I'm fairly satisfed it's a solid technique.

Credits

This tutorial is contributed by Chris Coyier. Visit CSS-Tricks to learn more CSS tricks from Chris.

Update:

The code in this example was updated to fix the div within a span issue and now validates.

Interestingly WAI accessibility guidelines say that for an increase in font size above 200% expansion in both dimensions is necessary. Emastic is an excellent CSS grid that allows the use of em or % measures for width which means that the whole latout grows with the text. I hope it is OK to post a link to this here: http://code.google.com/p/emastic/

SvenFeb 17, 2012 @ 06:33

Thx man! But the use of the div selector in the CSS is not nessasary. I know.. I’m a bit of a perfectionist.. :P

Interestingly WAI accessibility guidelines say that for an increase in font size above 200% expansion in both dimensions is necessary. Emastic is an excellent CSS grid that allows the use of em or % measures for width which means that the whole latout grows with the text.